I tried it yesterday and, yes, it's a mind-blower. Not exactly sure how I'll use it, because it's applicable for only one client at a time, whereas a website is applicable for multiple parties without using the special goggles. But I'm a small office. For a larger real estate office, for example, I can sure see how having these VR goggles in the lobby could be entrancing and captivating for people as they are waiting. Or for real estate brokers who want to send goggles and a phone to someone faraway with 5-10 homes to view, in hopes they will purchase based on viewing them via the goggles, this system could be a real winner.

My model of historical museum is converting to VR Showcase by Matterport team. When I get this VR Showcase next week, I will review for you and share recorded mirroring video at forum. And about walkthrough event, I guess it is similar with a navigator plug-in for Unity - Google Cardboard.

I wasn't looking at a walk-through on a 3D M'port showcase. I was looking at a couple of sample VR presentations, one of the interior of a property that I don't believe was shot with a M'port camera and the other inside a stunning underground cave. Both were captivating and the stability depended only on the stability of your head as you move the goggles.